23 Jan 2014

Today health advocates were shocked by the direct and appalling statements attributed to Bayer CEO Marijn Dekkers. Published in Businessweek on January 21, 2014 and written by Bloomberg reporter Ketaki Gokhale, a news story about disputes over drug patents (link here) ended with an account of the India compulsory license on the cancer drug Nexavar, and practically exploded. Dekker is quoted as saying Bayer did not intend the cancer drug to be sold to cancer patients in India, adding “We developed it for western patients who can afford it.” From the Bloomberg/Businessweek story:

Under India’s patent laws, compulsory licenses can be awarded for some products still under patent if the original isn’t available locally at a reasonable price.

Natco Pharma Ltd. (NTCPH) applied directly to India’s patents office and was awarded the nation’s first compulsory license in March 2012 to make a copy of Bayer’s Nexavar cancer drug at a 97 percent discount to the original product. In March last year, Bayer lost its bid to stop Natco from making the generic drug and is appealing the decision at the Mumbai High Court.

“We did not develop this medicine for Indians,” Dekkers said Dec. 3. “We developed it for western patients who can afford it.”

Apparently the December 3, 2013 quote is from an earlier largely overlooked event hosted by the FT. For more context, note that the Bayer price for Nexavar was $65 thousand USD, per year, in India, and that Bayer is currently arguing that the $65 thousand price is "reasonably affordable" to the India Supreme Court. Dekker's comments will likely be quoted extensively in India, and I would not be surprised to see them quoted in a decision rejecting the Bayer appeal. It is worth noting thatDekkers, who holds both Dutch and U.S. citizenship, is a member of the Board of Directors of General Electric, another company that takes a very hard line on intellectual property issues. (See, for example: http://keionline.org/node/1822).

The U.S. government has weighed in on the side of Bayer in the patent case, at the highest levels of the India and the US governments.

7 comments:

They know the Indians are too smart for their toxic medications. I think they prefer safer and natural medicines like herbs, eating healthy and being physically active (Yoga too!). http://allherbalremedies.org

Congratulation Marijn, you have made the list of famous quotations.Marie Antoinette " Well, let them eat cake"Custer "it is just a few Indians"Titanic " just a little iceberg, and we are unsinkable"Hopefully this will be the fuel needed to destroy the Pharma patents monopoly worldwide. It can easily be exterpolated from Indians, to "Indians, Chinese, Russians, Africans, Latinos...."A shot across the bows of the TPP.

As an aside on famous quotes :Fidel "head for the hills, the army is coming"Che "but what about the women?"Fidel "screw the women"Che "Have we time?"

Your blog is absolutely worth to read if anybody comes throughout it. I'm lucky I did because now I've got a whole new view of this. I didn't realize that this issue was so important and so universal. You certainly put it in perspective for me.